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South Carolina Timeshare Exit Analyzer

AI-powered help tailored to South Carolina law — understand your rights and fight back.

SC law gives South Carolina residents specific protections when they're dealing with a timeshare exit analyzer situation — but those protections only kick in if you actually invoke them in writing. This page covers what the law says, where to file, and how Counter Gameplan helps you build the letter that gets results.

South Carolina by the Numbers

Statutory rescission window

Typically 3–10 days from signing

Annual fee increase

4–6% per year is typical

Resale value

Often $1 plus closing — assume zero

Exit company red flag

Upfront fees of $3,000+

The South Carolina rescission window (cooling-off period)

If you signed a timeshare contract recently, South Carolina likely gives you a statutory rescission window — a short period (often 3–10 days, depending on state) to cancel the contract for any reason, no penalty, full refund.

This window is strict. Send written cancellation by certified mail with return receipt within the window. Use the address specified in the contract. Even one day late, the rescission right is typically gone. Counter Gameplan handles the formatting and citations so you can focus on the facts.

Options for older timeshares in South Carolina

If you're past the rescission window, your options narrow but aren't gone: deed-back (some developers will accept a deeded surrender of the unit, sometimes for a fee), resale (almost always at a substantial loss — most resales sell for $1 plus closing), donation (a few charities accept timeshares, though tax benefit is limited), or formal contract challenge (claiming fraud or misrepresentation at the time of sale).

Avoid "timeshare exit companies" charging upfront fees of $3,000–$10,000. Most are scams or simply don't deliver. South Carolina attorney generals have issued multiple advisories about this industry.

Challenging the contract for misrepresentation

South Carolina consumer protection law gives you grounds to challenge a timeshare contract if the salesperson misrepresented: the value or resale potential of the timeshare, the availability of bookings (frequent overpromising), the level of maintenance fees and how they'd increase over time, the difficulty of exit, or material features of the property.

Document what you were told (or what was implied). Marketing materials, presentation slides, and your own contemporaneous notes are powerful evidence. A formal letter to the developer, with copy to the South Carolina Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division, often produces a settlement offer.

Maintenance fees and what happens if you stop paying

Maintenance fees on South Carolina timeshares typically increase 4–6% annually and can exceed $1,500/year. If you stop paying, the developer can: send the account to collections (impacting your credit), foreclose on the unit (creating a foreclosure on your credit), or pursue you civilly for the past-due balance.

For "right-to-use" (non-deeded) timeshares, the consequences are usually limited to collections. For deeded timeshares, foreclosure is the bigger risk. Either way, do not stop paying without first sending formal exit correspondence.

Reporting timeshare fraud in South Carolina

The South Carolina Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division accepts complaints about timeshare developers and resale companies. Federal Trade Commission also has authority over the industry. Filing complaints accomplishes two things: it creates a record that can become evidence in your individual case, and it contributes to broader enforcement actions.

The FTC has taken action against multiple "timeshare exit" scams in recent years, and South Carolina states are increasingly aggressive about consumer protection in this space.

Official South Carolina Resources

Authoritative government sources for further research and filing complaints.

South Carolina Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division

File complaints about developers or exit-company scams in South Carolina.

FTC — Timeshare Resale Scams

Federal guidance on common scams and how to file complaints.

A timeshare exit company charges $3,000–$10,000

$79.99one-time
Proprietary AI for your situationResults emailed in 60 secondsState-specific to South Carolina

What you receive

Every legitimate exit option ranked
Scam exit company red flags
Deed-back program eligibility
Cancellation letter if applicable

Frequently Asked Questions — South Carolina

Quick answers to the most common South Carolina questions on this topic.

Can I cancel a South Carolina timeshare?

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Within the statutory rescission window (3–10 days from signing), yes — send written cancellation by certified mail. After the window, options are limited but not gone.

Are timeshare exit companies legitimate?

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Most are scams. Upfront fees of $3,000–$10,000 with vague promises and no refunds are the classic pattern. Both South Carolina and the FTC have issued warnings.

Can I just stop paying?

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Not recommended without an exit plan. Stopping payments can lead to collections and (for deeded timeshares) foreclosure. Send formal correspondence first.

Can I sell my timeshare?

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Yes, but almost always at a substantial loss. Most timeshares resell for $1 plus closing costs. Assume the resale value is zero when planning your exit.

What about misrepresentation by the salesperson?

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That's a viable angle. South Carolina consumer protection law gives you grounds to challenge contracts where sales pitches misrepresented value, availability, fees, or exit options.

Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only. Laws vary and may have changed. Always verify current South Carolina law before taking action. Counter Gameplan does not provide legal advice. For complex legal matters, consult a licensed attorney in South Carolina.